A vibrant and vital antidote to every phony Hollywood teen picture, bringing lo-fi authenticity to the coming-of-age genre as a young woman navigates the less-than-glamorous realities of lov... Read allA vibrant and vital antidote to every phony Hollywood teen picture, bringing lo-fi authenticity to the coming-of-age genre as a young woman navigates the less-than-glamorous realities of love and sex with a frankness rarely seen on-screen.A vibrant and vital antidote to every phony Hollywood teen picture, bringing lo-fi authenticity to the coming-of-age genre as a young woman navigates the less-than-glamorous realities of love and sex with a frankness rarely seen on-screen.
Andrew DeAngelo
- Matt
- (as Andrew David DeAngelo)
Alicia J. Rose
- Allison
- (as Alicia Rose)
Davey Havok
- George
- (as Davey Havoc/Davey Havock)
- …
D'Arcy Drollinger
- Fake virginity couple
- (as D'arcy Drollinger)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
Mary Jane is one of those low budget movies that we are all supposed to love because it's a low budget movie, but that just doesn't fly. This is a film with almost no redeeming qualities. The camera work is bad, the lighting is bad, and most of the actors couldn't act their way out of a paper bag. It even lacks the one thing that sets most indie films apart and costs nothing, a good script. I have no doubts as to why this film is having a hard time getting distributed, and it has nothing to do with the film's controversial content. The fact of the matter is this movie is just plain bad.
So I knew nothing of this film or its director Sarah Jacobson coming into this viewing at MoMA, but thought I'd check it out. Many of the criticisms leveled against the film are true. The script is weak, as are most of the technical aspects of it. The characters mostly represent archetypes and much of the dialogue is eye-rolling. However, to this films credit I actually worked in a movie theater and also moved to NYC in my twenties and I distinctly remember people just like these characters in the film also saying equally fatalistic, clueless, nonsensical things. To that I must give some credit where it is due, which leads me to think that it is the direction that lets the film down? Not sure about that but I will say that for as much bad as this film contains I'm happy that I decided to check it out, and while it's clearly not for everyone, it just might be worth it for those still curious.
A sex-positive feminist punk-rock coming-of-age story. Way lo-fi and very charming. The performances are uneven at times but the script is really funny and rings very true. It's the most unsentimental and realistic portrayal of sexual awakening that I've ever seen. Like a low-budget "Slums of Beverly Hills," only far better.
While I agree the screenwriting isn't the greatest, for the period in which it was released, it has very progressive views. Very open-minded for the mid 90's, and sadly, even today. It showed same sex relationships, single parenthood, female sexuality, sexual harassment and more without judgment or stereotypical characters in a time where that was taboo and unthinkable.
I really enjoyed this film. I felt that _Mary Jane_ perfectly portrayed issues about sexuality. I liked the juxtapositions of real life scenes of sex with discussion and portrayal of 'movie sex scenes.' I thought that the plot line was really good, but that it was occasionally difficult to watch because of the rough way that the film was shot. Many of the scenes were really dark. then again, it was done on the cheap, and an admirable job was done all in all.
Did you know
- TriviaFilmed entirely on super 8 colour reversal film, which was considered a cheap amateur film stock at the time. Since then, many fans of the aesthetic look of super 8 film have embraced this movie and it has gained a cult following.
- Crazy creditsThe script supervisor's name is upside-down in the closing credits.
- ConnectionsReferences Reefer Madness (1938)
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $50,000 (estimated)
- Runtime
- 1h 38m(98 min)
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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